Nothing quite prepares you for the riot of musical colour that Barokksolistene call their Alehouse Sessions, a dizzying kaleidoscope of musical genres and moods. Crossover is difficult to pull off: you have to be an incredibly talented and inquisitive musician to avoid sounding like a numpty to an afficionado of a genre you weren't originally trained in. Barokksolistene are packed with musicians who do it superbly.
Here’s the idea. In 1642, Oliver Cromwell declared that “public stage plays were of lascivious merth and levity”. London’s theatres were shut down and the capital was flooded with unemployed musicians – an eerie premonition of the state of things last summer. Unlike last summer, however, the musicians in 1642 were able to take refuge in the city’s thousands of taverns, creating some earnings – and possibly a certain level of public nuisance – as they went. So Barokksolistene seek to recreate the atmosphere of a 17th-century London tavern, a unique combination of musical virtuosity and raucous banter. There are limitations, of course. You can’t quite emulate the spit, sawdust and stench of cheap alcohol in the gentility of Middle Temple Hall. In compensation, though, you do have a giant portrait of Charles I looking over you to add character.
The music starts off in an era when court music was still close to its popular dance music roots, before the two became distilled into their separate streams of “classical” and “folk”. So the “classical early music” stream is represented by Purcell, himself a regular denizen of London alehouses. The folk streams come from everywhere: jigs, reels, sea shanties and slow airs from Scotland and Scandinavia, there was bluegrass, klezmer, flamenco – in addition to playing and singing flamenco, one of the Barokksolistene’s guitarists, Steve Player, turns out to be an accomplished dancer. All of it was delivered with unbridled joy in the players' ability to ratchet up the speed and play tricks on each other, or to switch into elegiac mood for a heart-melting version of Robert Burns’ My Love is Like a Red, Red Rose, or to grab an (obviously planted) audience member for an epic rendering of The Raggle Taggle Gypsies – the said audience member turning out to be soprano Mary Bevan, sounding fabulous on the next song. You couldn’t ask for a better celebration of a dozen different folk music idioms, or for a more genial compere than Thomas Guthrie.